Sweet Like Sugar (Kensington Books) is a charming novel that describes the convergence of a young man’s openly gay identity...
The first chapter of Jameson Currier’s new novel, The Third Buddha (Chelsea Station Editions), begins with a Chelsea dinner party...
Dakota, or What’s a Heaven For (North Dakota Institute for Regional Studies) describes how the Dakota Territories were settled by outsiders: Norwegians, Swedes, Finns, Russians, Jews, and women. A few of the women settlers quietly entered into relationships with each other but never identified themselves as lesbian. This romantic, and sometimes melodramatic, novel is based in the history of the Dakotas and, while a bit too long, strives to fill the large physical, historical, and emotional territory. Read More
Lambda Literary Award Finalist How were women’s relationships depicted in plays, dramas, poetry, and novels before the 21st Century? In...
Lambda Award Finalist Emma Pérez’s new novel Forgetting the Alamo, or Blood Memory powerfully presents a revenge tale from an...


